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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Inflammatory mediator response to Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria in vitro and in middle ear infections

Skovbjerg, Susann, January 2010 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Göteborg : Göteborgs universitet, 2010.
82

Evaluation of a selective media for the detection of gram-positive bacteria in leg ulcers and pressure wounds

Backlund, Ingrid January 2015 (has links)
Hard-to-heal ulcers are resource intensive due to the fact that they are difficult to treat and especially vulnerable to bacterial invasion. The bacterial culture contaminating these wounds often consist of several different bacterial organisms that originate from endogenous sources. Necrotic material in ischemic ulcers provide nutrition which support bacterial reproduction, increasing the risk of infection. Determining causative pathogen in infected ulcers proves to be difficult when culturing swab samples, however Staphylococcus aureus and hemolytic streptococci generally act as primary pathogens.     The aim of the study was to investigate if the detection rate increased for S. aureus and hemolytic streptococci when culturing swab samples from ulcers on Columbia CNA; a media selective for gram-positive bacteria. In the experimental procedure the inhibitory action of CNA upon gram-negative bacterial growth was evaluated, using simulated ulcer samples (n=6) containing bacterial quality control strains in arbitrary concentrations. Additionally, patient samples (n=51) were cultured and screened for primary pathogens to investigate differences in the detection rate for CNA and the current culture media; Blood agar, Chocolate agar, Gentian violet blood agar and CLED agar.    Results from simulated ulcer samples showed excellent inhibitory function regarding the antibiotic substances of the CNA agar. Culturing patient samples from lower leg- and pressure ulcers on CNA, provided indications of diverse circumstances yielding higher respectively lower detection rate concerning S. aureus and hemolytic streptococci. Samples containing mixed flora with gram-negative bacteria generated higher detection rate and samples containing S. aureus yielded a lower detection rate when culturing on CNA, compared with that of the routine method.
83

Identification and Characterization of Intermediates during Folding on the β-Barrel Assembly Machine in Escherichia coli

Xue, Mingyu 04 June 2015 (has links)
β-barrel membrane proteins play important structural and functional roles in Gram negative bacteria and in mitochondria and chloroplasts of eukaryotes. A conserved machine is responsible for the folding and insertion of β-barrel membrane proteins but its mechanism remains largely unknown. In E. coli, a five protein β-barrel assembly machine (Bam) assembles β-barrel proteins into the outer membrane (OM). Among all β-barrel membrane proteins in E. coli , the β-barrel component of the OM LPS translocon is one of only two essential β-barrels, the other being the central component of the Bam machinery itself. The OM LPS translocon, which consists of OM β-barrel protein LptD (lipopolysaccharide transport) and OM lipoprotein LptE, is responsible for the final export of LPS molecules into the outer leaflet of the OM, resulting in an asymmetric bilayer that blocks the entry of toxic molecules such as antibiotics. This thesis describes the characterization of the biogenesis pathway of the OM LPS translocon and its folding and insertion into the OM by the Bam machinery. An in vivo S35-Methionine pulse-labeling assay was developed to identify intermediates along the biogenesis of the OM LPS translocon. Seven intermediates were identified along the pathway. We show that proper assembly of the OM LPS translocon involves an oxidative disulfide bond rearrangement from a nonfunctional intermediate containing non-native disulfides. We also found that the rate determining step of OM LPS translocon biogenesis is β-barrels folding process by the Bam machinery. Using in vivo chemical crosslinking, we accumulated and trapped a mutant form of LptD on BamA, the central component of the Bam machinery. We extended the S35-Methionine pulse-labeling method to allow chemical crosslinking of substrates on the Bam complex and trapped LptD while it was being folded on the Bam machine. We demonstrated that the interaction between LptD and BamA is independent of LptE, while that between LptD and BamD, the other essential component of the Bam complex beside BamA, is LptE dependent. Based on these findings, we proposed a model of Bam-assisted folding of the OM LPS translocon in which LptE templates the folding of LptD. / Chemistry and Chemical Biology
84

Chromosomal β-lactamases in enterobacteria and in vivo evolution of β-lactam resistance

Bergström, Sven January 1983 (has links)
The ß-lactam antibiotics are the most important antibacterial agents in the treatment of infectious diseases. A severe problem in ß-lactam therapy is the emergence of ß-lactam resistant bacteria. Clinical ß-lactam resistance is most often due to the production of ß-lactamases. ß-lactamase genes reside either on plasmids or on the chromosome. The aim of this study was to acquire an understanding of organisation and regulation of chromosomal ß- lactamase genes in different Gram negative species and to elucidate the mechanisms for ampC hyperproduction in the in vivo situation. By DNA hybridization with an ampC probe from Escherichia coli K-12 it was shown that other Gram negative bacteria contained an artpC like chromosomal gene, suggesting a common evolutionary origin. Furthermore, the preceding frd operon that overlaps the ampC gene in E. coli K-12 was found to be much more conserved than the ampC gene in the bacterial species investigated. The ampC and frd opérons in Shigella sonnei and Citrobacter freundii were cloned and characterized by physical mapping. The respective maps were compared to the ampC and frd region in E. coli K-12. The physical map of Sh. sonnei was almost identical to the E. coli K-12 map, whereas in C. freundii only the frd region exhibited any considerable homology. Moreover, in C. freundii, the anpC and frd regions were separated by 1100 basepairs. It is suggested that this DNA is involved in the induction of ß-lactamase production in this organism. A hypothesis for the evolution of the anpC operon in enterobacteria is presented. By isolating and characterizing six ß-lactam resistant clinica], isolates of E. coli hyperproducing the dhrcmosomal ß-lactamase, genetic mechanisms for in vivo evolved resistance was aimed at. These isolates exhibited a 24-48 fold increase in ß-lactamase production. The ß-lactamase produced was found to be biochemically and immunologically identical to the ß-lactamase produced by E. coli K-12. The ampC control region of these six E. coli isolates was DNA-seqenced. The cause of ß-lactamase hyperproduction in five of the clinical E. coli isolates, identical in the DNA segment sequenced, was due to a strong novel ampC promoter displaced 5 bp upstream of the ampC promoter defined in E. coli K-12. The ß-lactamase hyperproduction in the sixth clinical isolate was shown to be caused by two mutations affecting both the promoter and the attenuator in the regulatory region defined by E. coli K- 12. The obtained changes were sufficient to explain the increase in ampC ß- 1 act ama se expression exhibited in these clinical E. coli isolates. Sequence analysis of the ampC control region in Sh. sonnei revealed that it was, with one exception, identical to the one found in the five clinical E. coli ß-lactamase hyperproducers. The only difference was in a position that creates the strong novel ampC promoter in the E. coli hyperproducers. By isolating spontaneous Sh. sonnei mutants with a 40-fold increase in ß-lactamase production carrying the same novel ampC promoter as the clinical E. coli isolates it was concluded that this DNA segment has been transferred in vivo frcm Shigella to E. coli across the species barrier. / <p>Diss. (sammanfattning) Umeå : Umeå universitet, 1983; Härtill 5 uppsatser</p> / digitalisering@umu
85

Optimization of pre-processing variables for hyperspectral analysis of focal plane array Fourier transform infrared images

Pinchuk, Tommy. January 2006 (has links)
A genetic algorithm was employed to select the optimal combination of preprocessing variables, including data pretreatment, data manipulation and feature extraction procedures, for eventual clustering of a data set consisting of hyperspectral images acquired by a focal plane array Fourier transform infrared (FPA-FTIR) spectrometer. The data set consisted of infrared images of bacterial films, and the classification task investigated was the discrimination between Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. The genetic algorithm evaluated combinations of variables pertaining to bacterial film thickness tolerances, baseline correction, pixel co-addition, outlier removal, smoothing, mean centering, normalization, derivatization, integration and principal component selection. Following numerous iterations of unsupervised processing, the genetic algorithm arrived at a sub-optimal solution yielding a clustering accuracy of 97.8% and a data utilization of 28.6%. The results provided insight into the co-dependencies of the pre-processing variables and their consequential effect on the selected data. The robustness of the classification model was evaluated and reinforced by the successful classification of two distinct validation sets. The overall success of the genetic algorithm suggests that it is an effective time saving resource for the optimization of pre-processing variables that does not require operator intervention.
86

Acquisition of haemoglobin-bound iron by Histophilus somni

Tremblay, Yannick January 2005 (has links)
Ovine (strains 9L and 3384Y) and bovine (strains 649, 2336 and 8025) isolates of Histophilus somni were investigated for their ability to acquire iron from haemoglobin (Hb). Bovine isolates were capable of utilizing bovine, but not ovine, porcine or human Hb as a source of iron. Ovine isolates could not obtain iron from Hb. Bovine isolates bound bovine, ovine, and human Hbs by means of the same iron-repressible receptor(s) and produced a ~120-kDa iron-repressible, outer membrane protein. Using PCR approaches, an iron-regulated operon containing hugX and hugZ homologues and a gene (hgbA) that encodes a TonB-dependent, Hb-binding proteins were identified in strains 649, 9L and 3384Y. In strains 9L and 3384Y, HgbA is truncated offering a possible explanation for their lack of utilization of Hb as an iron source. In strains 2336 and 8025, expression of HgbA was also subject to a form of phase variation.
87

The Photorhabdus temperata sspAB locus is required for symbiont transmission in Heterorhabditis bacteriophora

Higginbotham, Katherine Marie. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Michigan State University. Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2008. / "Advisor, Todd A. Ciche"--Acknowledgements. Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Aug. 5, 2009) Includes bibliographical references. Also issued in print.
88

Functional analysis of a modC homolog in the Azotobacter vinelandii nif-gene cluster

Shivaji, Sangeetha, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Mississippi State University. Department of Biological Sciences. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
89

Lipid A heterogeneity within Porphyromonas gingivalis and other oral bacteria : effect of lipid A content on hTLR4 utilization and E-selectin expression /

Dixon, Douglas Raymond. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2005. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 155-166).
90

Presença e tipificação de Salmonella spp. no conteúdo ruminal de bovinos pós-abate / Presence and characterization os Salmonella spp. in ruminal contents of cattle post-slaughter

Prodócimo-Moscardi, Salésia Maria [UNESP] 07 February 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-03-03T11:52:42Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2014-02-07Bitstream added on 2015-03-03T12:07:10Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 000807003.pdf: 1969028 bytes, checksum: ffdf99374d166fada9ca950a025cb45d (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / O Brasil lidera o ranking de maior exportador de carne bovina no mundo desde 2008. Garantir a segurança microbiológica desses alimentos tem sido um dos principais focos da indústria processadora de carnes. A aplicação de análises nas diversas etapas do processo industrial tem sido vital para implantar e manter programas de autocontrole como o APPCC. Entre as enfermidades mais frequentes causadas pela ingestão de alimentos contaminados, especialmente os de origem animal, destacam-se as salmoneloses, sendo que sua transmissão se dá primariamente pela via fecal oral. Diante disso, esse trabalho teve como objetivo pesquisar a presença de Salmonella spp. em amostras de conteúdo ruminal coletadas durante o abate de bovinos em uma planta frigorífica localizada na região metropolitana de Curitiba - PR. Duzentos e dois animais distribuídos em oito lotes foram avaliados entre os meses de agosto a dezembro de 2013. Ao final do experimento, 37,5% dos lotes mostraram-se positivos para o agente sendo que 2,97% (6/202) das amostras de conteúdo ruminal isolaram o micro-organismo. A totalidade dos animais positivos recebia como alimento apenas pasto de azevém e aveia. Não foi observada a influência de fatores como o estresse do transporte ou temperatura ambiental sobre o isolamento do patógeno. Entretanto a detecção do mesmo sorovar, Salmonella Schwarzengrund na totalidade dos isolamentos nos permite levantar a hipótese de que a contaminação dos animais tenha se dado na própria indústria, a partir das estruturas físicas, responsáveis por conter os bovinos ou conduzi-los ao box de insensibilização / Brazil leads the world ranking of bovine meat exportation since 2008. To ensure the microbiological safety of these food products has been one of the primary focuses of the meat processing industry. The application of analyses on diverse stages of the industrial process has been vital for deploy and keeping of self-control programs like APPCC. Beyond the most frequent diseases caused by the ingestion of contaminated food, specially animal origin ones, the salmonellosis stand out being transmitted primarily via fecal-oral route. In light of this, the work had the objective to research the presence of Salmonella spp. in rumen fluid samples collected during cattle slaughter at a slaughtering plant localized in Curitiba’s metropolitan area. Two hundred animals distributed over eight lots was evaluated between august and december, 2013. At the end of the experiment, 37.5% of the lots were positive for the agent of which 2.97% (6/202) of samples of rumen contents isolated the micro-organism.The total of the positive animals had been feed with ryegrass pastures and oat. Not the influence of factors like transportation stress or environment temperature over pathogen isolation was observed. However, the detection of the same serovar, Salmonella Schwarzengrund on overall insulation allow us to raise the hypothesis that all animal contamination have been given inside the industry itself, from the infrastructure responsible of holding the cattle or conducting it to the stunning box

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